Teacher in Dental Public Health, King´s College London, Faculty of Dentistry, Oral and Craniofacial Sciences, King´s College London, Bessemer Road, London, SE5 9RS, UK.
Associate Dean, Undergraduate Clinical Education and Honorary Consultant GSTT Trust Service Lead for Undergraduate Activity, Guy´s Hospital, Great Maze Pond, London, SE1 1UL, UK.
Br Dent J. 2022 Mar;232(6):396-406. doi: 10.1038/s41415-022-4044-x. Epub 2022 Mar 25.
Aim To explore young people's perceptions of dentistry as a potential future career, including features which would attract or deter them from wanting to become dentists and the perceived influences on these views.Methods Purposive sampling of London schools was undertaken. Exploration of academically-able, science-minded young people's (aged 14-18 years) perceptions of dentistry as a potential career was achieved through a series of focus groups conducted at various types of school in the Greater London region (13 focus groups and 91 students). A topic guide, informed by the literature and previous research, explored the perceived motivating and demotivating factors and associated influences, identified by these pupils, on studying dentistry at university. Data were analysed using framework methodology.Results Multiple factors were identified by London secondary school pupils that would attract them to dentistry. Pull factors were: 1) science-based; 2) status and security - extrinsic rewards; 3) structure of service provision; 4) career opportunities; 5) social interactions; 6) personal skills and care - intrinsic rewards; and 7) being a vocational degree. Push factors away from the career included lack of diversity within the job and the 'negative image' of dentists, with medicine having greater social status and more varied career options. Individual and wider influences on pupils' perceptions included their personal experience with dentistry, social and community networks, the school environment, as well as system and societal level influencers.Conclusions These findings suggest that a wide range of influences determine teenagers' perceptions of a dental career. Pupils in London schools report similar features of dentistry as being attractive as dental students, as well as its importance as a vocational degree, and although dentistry appears to lack status and profile when compared with medicine, it may be more acceptable in relation to its lifestyle. Individual sociodemographic characteristics and wider environmental factors may influence the relative importance of these features.
目的 探索年轻人对牙科作为潜在未来职业的看法,包括吸引或阻止他们成为牙医的特征,以及对这些观点的感知影响。
方法 在伦敦的学校进行了有针对性的抽样。通过在大伦敦地区的各种类型的学校进行一系列焦点小组讨论,探索了学术能力强、有科学头脑的年轻人(14-18 岁)对牙科作为潜在职业的看法(13 个焦点小组和 91 名学生)。一个主题指南,由文献和先前的研究提供信息,探讨了这些学生认为在大学学习牙科的动机和抑制因素以及相关影响。使用框架方法分析数据。
结果 伦敦中学的小学生确定了多个吸引他们从事牙科的因素。吸引力因素包括:1)基于科学;2)地位和安全——外在奖励;3)服务提供结构;4)职业机会;5)社交互动;6)个人技能和关怀——内在奖励;7)是一个职业学位。促使他们远离这个职业的因素包括工作缺乏多样性和牙医的“负面形象”,而医学具有更高的社会地位和更多样化的职业选择。对学生感知的个人和更广泛的影响包括他们个人的牙科经验、社交和社区网络、学校环境以及系统和社会层面的影响者。
结论 这些发现表明,广泛的影响因素决定了青少年对牙科职业的看法。伦敦学校的学生报告了牙科具有吸引力的类似特征,作为职业学位也很重要,尽管与医学相比,牙科缺乏地位和知名度,但与它的生活方式相比,它可能更受欢迎。个人社会人口特征和更广泛的环境因素可能会影响这些特征的相对重要性。